Yes, after you have paraphrased or included a quoted material in a research paper, you must put in parenthesis the original author. If you don't want to put it in parenthesis, you could include the author's name somewhere in your sentence before quoting or paraphrasing. Example: John Locke said: "Don't tell me what I can and can not do." or "Don't tell me what I can and can not do" (Locke).
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No, quotes are for quoted material only.
Quotation marks typically go before or after commas, depending on whether the comma is part of the quoted material. If the comma is part of the quoted material, it goes inside the quotation marks. If the comma is not part of the quoted material, it goes outside the quotation marks.
20% Use MS Word to count total words. Subtract words in cover page. Subtract words in Reference page. Copy and paste all quotes into a single document to gather word use. divide quotes by total words times by 100 % = quote use. example: 526 words use (total) - 67 words (cover page & references) = 459 words. total quoted words = 63. (63/459)*100=13.72% The paper is comprised of 13.72% of quoted material.
A reference to material quoted in a report that prints at the end of the document
false
Yes, a sentence with a quoted statement can have a comma outside the quotation marks if the comma is not part of the original quoted material. For example: She said, "I will be there tomorrow."
The best place to find research material on the operton servers is directly from the manufacturer. You can either contact them by phone or visit their website.
Yes, if used like this: "Her exact words were 'Yes, you can, you don't need permission', so I did."
a cirtation identify the source research material used in wrting or quoting of information in your paper? true or false